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Word: faithfully (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

...Crimson has stated in its editorials, Harvard students "are not so stupid as to dive into a class for which they are ill-prepared, unless they are willing to put in extra work." Departments should still consider concentrators the primary audience of their course offerings. We have faith that professors will maintain the rigor of their courses, and thus the option of taking departmental classes for Core credit will only be used by students in areas in which they are particularly experienced or passionate...

Author: By James T.L. Grimmelmann, | Title: Toward a More Flexible Core | 4/10/1997 | See Source »

...this sort of modification to the Core has been raised on occasion: that it would be too difficult to administer and would require too much work from an already strained Core program. If the current administrative system is inadequate to oversee the Core with such modification, we have faith that Harvard will modify the administration to implement whatever it feels is the best educational choice...

Author: By James T.L. Grimmelmann, | Title: Toward a More Flexible Core | 4/10/1997 | See Source »

...feel it's important to take my faith and put it in a place where people can use it," he said...

Author: By Alexandra S. Morrison, | Title: Group Sponsors 'Living Stones' | 4/9/1997 | See Source »

...once said, "who knows enough to say with confidence whether one religion has been greater than all others." And though the Heaven's Gaters' doctrine may seem as weird to us as ours apparently seemed to them, the wider tragedy of the cruel suicides would be if our own faith prevented us from lavishing at least as much sympathy on the group as curiosity...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: OUR DAYS OF JUDGMENT | 4/7/1997 | See Source »

Shorto, a journalist, skillfully lays out the anomalies, allusions and stylistic shifts that have caused a wide spectrum of scholars to see the Gospels less as factual truth than as a product of faith and early Christian politics. He also examines the recent archaeological finds that revved the debate. Detouring occasionally (describing, for instance, a DNA study of the goats whose parched skins were used for the Dead Sea Scrolls), he picks and chooses among the available theories to arrive at a kind of aggregate anti-Gospel...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOOKS: FACT VS. FAITH | 4/7/1997 | See Source »

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